of North Manchester . MANOR Originally a detached part of the demesne of Chorlton , BESWICK was early in the 13th century granted by Gospatrick de Chorlton to Cockersand Abbey in pure alms. 1 Of the abbey it was in

Ordnance datum. The population in 1901 was 19,112. A brook which is called Gore Brook in Gorton and Chorlton Brook in Chorlton crosses the middle of Withington from north-east to south-west, and is joined by the Ley or Cringle Brook

in Ardwick and Chorlton of Edward Mosley as of his manor of Manchester ; the annual value was 40 s .; ibid. xxvii, 44. Edmund Entwisle in 1544 held some land in Ardwick , together with his Chorlton estate; ibid.

adding an Explanation of the casual Business during Vacation which requires the Attention of the Barons or One of them." Chorlton Row Improvement Bill. The Earl of Shaftesbury reported from the Lords Committees, to whom the Bill, intituled, "An Act

claim, with arrears from date of petition. 23 1634 3 April 1655. His request that the tithes of Stretford and Chorlton, which were also in the deed, may be allowed, referred to Brereton, who is to peruse the deeds, and

from the Lords Committees, to whom the Bill, intituled, "An Act for more effectually repairing and improving the Road from Chorlton Row , near Manchester , in the County Palatine of Lancaster , to the Bridge at the Corn Mills

House of Commons Parliamentary Papers

Journals of the Houfe of Lords. A. 1798, Hyde et al. Leave for a Bill: Bill read. Houblon&apos;s Bill. (t divided Trinity, in the Univerfity of Cambridge, and Sir John Nelthorpe Baronet, may be required to ?&apos; anfwer the

pleafe. Hodie 2a vice lecla eÃÂ Billa, intituled, &quot; An Aft for* Hyde&apos;s Bill, vefting certain Meffuages and Lands at Chorlton Row and Grindlow, in the County of Lancalier, in the GuarÃÂ¬ dians of John Hyde Efquire, an Infant, the

of the Committee to whom the Bill, intituled, &quot; An Aft for veiling cer- &quot; tain Mefluages and Lands at Chorlton Row and Grind- low, in the County of Lancafter, in the Guardians of John Hyde Efquire, an Infant, the

John Pitt and others: To return the Bill, intituled, &quot; An Act for vefting &lt;c certain Meffuages and Lands at Chorlton Row and &quot; Grindlow, in the County ofLancaÃÂer, in the Guardians *c of John Hyde Efquire, an Infant, the

niently fituated for the faid Redor and his Suc- ceflbrs.&quot; &apos;c An Ad for vefting certain Meffuages and Lands at Chorlton Row and Grindlow, in the County of Lancafier, in the Guardians of John : Hyde Efquire, an Infant, the

19th Century British Pamphlets

in the reports of the Statistical Society of Manchester , were : Scholars. In the Townsh ips of Manchester , Chorlton , and Hulme 10,347 In the Borough of Bury 861 In the Borough of Liverpool 15,500 or about one-third

k popularly understood as the town-which comprises within its area a portion ot unions of Manchester , Salford , and Chorlton ; all of which, however, are so intimately connected, that it may almost be said ' tis difficult to

although the profits of trade carried on by the occupier of land upon it cannot be made directly the subject of the rate (6) Chorlton -on-Hedlock (Oveiseers) v. Chorlton (Guardians). 51, L. I. and B., 458. (e) 6 B., 179.

of our subject must be left. REPORT OF MR . HOLLAND , OF MANCHESTER . " In 20 streets in Chorlton on Medlock, after the streets had been properly paved and drained, the mortality fell from 110 to 89 per

e so called and considered, and which consists of the several townships of Manchester , Salford , Ardwick , Cheetham, Chorlton Row, Hulme , and Pendleton , containing 230,000 souls, has no greater authority in its immense population, than that

of the priory.[footnote] During the Easter term of 1408 the MP and his wife either sold or conveyed land in Chorlton, Staffordshire, to a local man. That Colclough earned at least part of his income as a farmer is borne

city for the soldiers’ charges.[footnote]He was a comparatively wealthy landowner, holding property not only at Chester and Hough, but at Chorlton, Blakenhall and elsewhere in the county; and in a district where a number of the leading gentry were crypto-Catholics,

upon whose estates, as we have seen, he had already cast a covetous eye. She brought him the manor of Chorlton, together with land in Edgeworth, Whitefield, Rusholme and other parts of Lancashire. In 1389, her son, Henry Trafford (whom

a year; and later, in 1410, Ralph became guardian of Edmund’s kinsman, John Trafford, who had succeeded to property in Chorlton. Meanwhile, in August 1403, our MP, who had been recently knighted (perhaps at the battle of Shrewsbury in the

Cause Papers in the Diocesan Courts of the Archbishopric of York, 1300-1858